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Blackout

por L. A. García-Roza

Series: Inspector Espinosa (6)

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806332,907 (3.31)1
Unable to forget the unsolved murder of a homeless man, Chief Inspector Espinosa investigates a group of affluent guests who had dined at a nearby mansion on the night of the killing, exposing a web of lies and cover-ups.
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When a crippled and seemingly homeless man is found shot to death in a cul-de-sac in a wealthy neighborhood Espinosa knew from childhood personal intrigue is added to his professional duty to find the killer. The secluded neighborhood is up a very steep hill so why would a vagrant man with only one leg be there, especially late at night in a torrential downpour? Espinosa likes two men for the crime. Both were collecting their cars in the same cul-de-sac after a dinner party. Both men initially lie to Espinosa but one man in particular holds his attention longer. There is something about Aldo. Espinosa and his team slowly turn up the pressure on their prime suspect, showing up at Aldo's work, following him around town, and repeatedly interviewing his therapist wife. Such scrutiny finally reveals Aldo is having an affair with a coworker. Even after Aldo's wife is found murdered Espinosa refuses to consider he has an open and shut case. He shows considerable restraint when he does not eagerly arrest the obvious suspect.
Character development is subtle and substantial all at once. The character of Camilla Bruno was intriguing. Was she seducing patients or not? I wish I had more Garcia-Rozas on my Challenge list. I would have liked to see how Espinoza's personality evolves. His love of books, for example.
One of the best part's of Garcia-Roza's writing is his elegant descriptions of the Rio de Janeiro neighborhoods (Copacabana and Ipanema specifically). I found myself playing around with Google Earth just to see how close he came to matching the true landscapes. ( )
  SeriousGrace | Mar 11, 2019 |
Garcia-Roza escreve lindamente, uma prosa limpa, linear, aparentemente simples. O primeiro capítulo é, mesmo, deslumbrante, envolvendo-nos num calor quase sólido, numa evocação de um passado distante e misterioso, num sentimento de impotência! O crime é, também, intrigante... um sem-abrigo, perneta, é assassinado com um único tiro no peito no cimo de uma ladeira de um beco sem saída de um dos morros do Rio de Janeiro onde o delegado Espinosa costumava brincar quando criança. Mas o desenvolvimento pareceu-me frágil, as considerações de Espinosa sobre o crime, algo repetitivas, e o final abrupto e um tanto previsível. Um desapontamento, porque não sou grande fã de policiais, mas sobretudo porque conheço uns quantos grandes fãs espinosistas... mas não desisto já. Abre-te [b:Uma Janela Em Copacabana|2781908|Uma Janela Em Copacabana|Luiz Alfredo Garcia-Roza|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1250560931s/2781908.jpg|240950]! ( )
  jmx | Jun 20, 2017 |
The first murder, that of a one-legged apparently homeless man, intrigues Detective Espinosa because it takes place in a district he knows well, close to where he grew up. The main suspects are two men who are collecting their parked cars in heavy rain after a dinner party. Espinosa prefers one over the other as a suspect but for a long time the case goes nowhere. Much of the investigation relates to how the victim got to the site of the murder, which is at the top of a very steep hill, and why he was there.

During part 2 of the story Espinosa and his team carry out a constant investigation of his preferred suspect, turning up at his place of work to check minor details of his story, or talking to his wife. We see most of the story through the eyes of this suspect, raising the question of how reliable a witness he really is. He claims to his wife that there are large parts of the evening that he doesn't remember. Espinosa ramps up the psychological pressure.

In places the author's style reminds me of Simenon and that is probably why I liked it so much.

Some readers will find the story's climax a bit too open-ended and inconclusive. ( )
  smik | Aug 28, 2013 |
Solid police detective mystery set in Rio. It's the sixth in the series and my guess is that a) Rio is one of the most compelling features of these novels, and b) this feature is more prominent in earlier novels. ( )
  ehines | Mar 24, 2013 |
This Brazilian mystery possesses a kind of frothy, Latino elan, but unfortunately that seems to be all there is. The book doesn't really function as mystery, per se, and it's slim charms don't offer enough to compensate.

Inspector Espinosa is called to a childhood haunt when a beggar turns up shot. But why would someone murder a man who has nothing, and what does one of the key witnesses - a neurotic interior designer - have to do with it?

Blackout's central mystery is at times predictable, illogical, and unguessable. The novel is more of a police procedural, but Espinosa's peregrinations lack much procedure. This gives the novel a kind of loping, episodic, almost pre-destined feel. This is not helped by the somewhat irrational and/or thin characters.

This is not to say the characters aren't enjoyable. They are all stereotypically (perplexingly!), sexy. Everyone seems to be good-looking, sleeping with someone with one eye on someone else. There's an undercurrent running through Blackout, a kind of unceasing murmur like a batucada - "It's so hot, the day is so beautiful, why worry? Let's make love!" It's certainly a change from the average police procedural, and it is winsome, in its own way.

But it's also kind of frustrating as the novel collapses wholly into silliness in the home stretch. You can't hate it too much for this; it's so light and trivial that a grudge seems needlessly stern, but at the same time there's not really a compelling reason to read any more. ( )
  patrickgarson | Nov 28, 2012 |
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It was early afternoon, the hottest hour of the day, when the water in the faucet was warm, the asphalt on the streets sizzling, and the cloudless sky unperturbed by the slightest breeze.
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Original title: Espinosa sem saida
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Unable to forget the unsolved murder of a homeless man, Chief Inspector Espinosa investigates a group of affluent guests who had dined at a nearby mansion on the night of the killing, exposing a web of lies and cover-ups.

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